kev20
UT45-17
- Joined
- Jul 21, 2006
- Messages
- 23,983
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Haha, damn straight butter!
If I'm doing it, I'll make sure the steak is dry, pat it with a paper towel. Salt it, I like coarse sea salt. Heat about a Tsp of vegetable oil, since your olive oil was extra virgin and/or a nice one, or you just let it get to hot. If you have an iron skillet use it. When the oil gets hot and begins to smoke, add the steak. Unlike on the grill, it's good to flip it a few times. Once you get a nice "sear" turn down the heat and add some butter, about 2 Tsp or more. Cook to the temp you want.
Remember, it will continue to cook like it would on the grill but even more because of the direct heat.
Behr, do you ever use cast iron skillets with a griddle (grill??) pattern; you know, the raised ridges that make sear marks? Kinda like corduroy.
lol, help me out! I'm waving my hands here.
I like them for bacon, because they keep the bacon out of the grease, but I haven't made up my mind for steaks, searing roasts before braising etc.
--geeze, this phone. No I don't use fast iron skillets, and I don't braid my pot roasts :crazy:
No. I have one and use it mainly to sear tuna. I cook bacon on it too, bacon got to be it that grease woman. I don't need fake grill marks either.
Edit: I didn't mean for that last sentence to be arrogant, I meant, if they're not real grill marks, I don't Want any.
:lol:
We have a square one (not cast iron, or fast either) that has warped, and I've been mulling replacing it. I figure if I haven't seen the need after six months, I don't really need it.
Its worth a buck fidy to just throw away.
Seriously, yes. Do you know what it's filled with?
